Potential jurors in Ahmaud Arbery case asked: Is U.S. Confederate flag
racist?
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[October 19, 2021]
By Rich McKay and Jonathan Allen
(Reuters) -Defense counsel in the trial of
three white men accused of murdering Black jogger Ahmaud Arbery in
Georgia asked potential jurors on Monday whether they considered the
Confederate battle flag a racist symbol.
Three out of the first group of 20 potential jurors raised their hands
when asked the question during jury selection at Glynn County Superior
Court in the small coastal city of Brunswick, where Arbery was shot dead
on Feb. 23, 2020.
Former policeman Gregory McMichael, 65, his son Travis McMichael, 35,
and neighbor William "Roddie" Bryan, 52, face charges of murder,
aggravated assault and false imprisonment in the killing of 25-year-old
Arbery.
All have pleaded not guilty. They say they chased and confronted Arbery
on a road in Satilla Shores, a mostly white neighborhood in Glynn
County, to make a citizen's arrest. The suspects say that Travis
McMichael killed Arbery with a shotgun in self defense. The three face
life in prison if convicted.
The question about the flag flown by the southern pro-slavery
Confederacy during the 1861-1865 Civil War, today viewed by some as a
symbol of white supremacism, came as the men's defense counsel signaled
they plan to challenge vigorously any perception the shooting was
racially motivated.
Franklin Hogue, a lawyer for Gregory McMichael, said it was important to
find out if potential jurors might have biases against the defendants.
"We do know that race is an issue in this case," he told the court.
The defendants' lawyers negotiated with Judge Timothy Walmsley over what
questions they could put to potential jurors, including whether they
could ask jurors' views about the Black Lives Matter anti-racism
movement.
Walmsley said he would allow some of the questions proposed about
potential jurors' views on race but wanted to limit the amount of time
spent on the topic.
"Black Lives Matter is not a party in this case; it's not part of this
criminal prosecution," he said.
When potential jurors were asked about having a "negative feeling"
towards Travis or Gregory McMichael, at least seven jurors raised their
hands for each of the men.
A potential juror who is a retired accountant and auditor, told the
court she harbored a negative view of the Confederate flag, an image of
which appeared in the old Georgia state flag that Travis McMichaels
included on his truck's vanity license plate.
"If somebody's flying a Confederate flag, I don't think it means they
believe in state's rights,” the woman said. "I think it means they have
a racist view."
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Marcus Arbery poses for a portrait in his living room were portraits
of his slain son, Ahmaud Arbery and a Celebration of Life
Proclamation that was issued by the Atlanta City Council hangs on
the wall in Brunswick, Georgia,
'I'M GIVING IT OVER TO GOD'
Jury selection started with a panel of 20 out of the 600 people
summoned on Monday. Court later adjourned for the day with eight
potential jurors being dismissed and without any jurors being
seated.
Both Arbery's father, Marcus Arbery, and mother, Wanda Cooper-Jones,
attended the proceedings.
"We know it was a racist killing, but I'm giving it over to God,"
Marcus Arbery told the media outside the courthouse.
Arbery's family and their supporters say he was targeted because he
was Black. Defense lawyers say the McMichaels and Bryan were
suspicious of Arbery and chased after him in pickup trucks because
they saw him go inside a house that was under construction. The
owner of the property has said he believed that Arbery had entered
the building site for a drink of water and that nothing was stolen..
Bryan recorded on his cellphone the confrontation between Arbery and
the McMichaels and the subsequent shooting. The video sparked
outrage across the United States.
A local prosecutor, whose office had previously employed Gregory
McMichael, initially declined to charge the three men. More than two
months passed after the killing before they were charged.
The judge curtailed public access to the proceedings on Monday,
citing the COVID-19 pandemic, but has allowed two reporters in the
courtroom.
It could takes days or even weeks to find 12 jurors and four
alternates. About 1,000 citizens in Glynn County, which is about 69%
white and 27% black, have received jury summons.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and Jonathan Allen in New York;
Additional reporting by Octavio Jones in Brunswick, Georgia; Editing
by Ross Colvin and Cynthia Osterman)
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